Teaching English as a Second Language can be a challenge when you spend so many hours searching for creative, awesome resources. I built this website to archive all teaching resources I find interesting and so other teachers can have access to them also.
Showing posts with label Conversation Starters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conversation Starters. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 21, 2017
Fabulous Games to Get Your Students Speaking
BY SUSAN VERNER
Many ESL teachers find that their students are timid speakers or reluctant to participate in class discussions.
It’s only natural. After all, they are trying to talk in a language they are still working on learning. Still, silence can be deadly in the ESL classroom for your students and you. When you want to get your students to speak up, try one of these fun and simple games to get them talking in class.
Try These 6 Involving Activities for Students to Speak Up
1. This is How We Roll
You can use this simple game as a get to know you at the start of school or later as a get to know you better activity. All you need is one standard die and six questions – either ice breakers or ones that elicit opinions, experience or other personal thoughts. Be creative and choose the ones you’d like to hear your students answer. Give students a list of the questions, and make sure they are numbered on the paper. Then, have students take turns rolling the die. Whatever number they roll, that is the question they must answer. You could do this activity as a class, in smaller groups or as a public speaking activity. For the latter, have students prepare answers to each question as homework and then have them share in front of the class after they roll.
2. Human Experience Bingo
Your students are probably already familiar with the rules of Bingo. Simply get five numbers in a line on a chart. You can use this as a basis for another get to know you game. Work with your class to compile a list experiences that a person might have had. For example, gone scuba diving, made a birthday cake and eaten sushi would all be good expereinces. Work together on the list until you have about 30-40 different experiences. (You can also compile the list on your own if you prefer.) Then, give students a blank bingo board (a 5x5 chart) and have them write one experience in each of the boxes. On your word, students mingle and talk to each other to find someone with each experience they have chosen. If a student finds someone who, for example, has gone scuba diving, that student signs the square where your student wrote it on his Bingo board. The first person to get five in a row yells, “Bingo!” Another variation is to arrange students speed dating style: two rows of chairs facing each other. Each pair then gets two minutes to talk with each other. When time is up, the students in one row shift one chair to the right. The game is over once someone has gotten five spaces in a row on their bingo board.
3. Character Trait Roulett
This game works best for students who already know each other fairly well. Work as a group to come up with a list of several character traits a person might have. (Try to stick to positive traits.) You might include adventurous, sympathetic and generous. Then write these traits on small slips of paper and put them in a bag. Each person takes a turn drawing one character trait from the bag in front of the class. The student must then announce who in class (and you are fair game, too) possesses that character trait. Of course, a name isn’t enough. The person must tell a story or give an example of why he made his particular choice.
4. Story Starter Hot Potato
Put the list of story starters in your writing drawer to double duty with this silly and fast paced game. Students play in small groups of around five members. Students should arrange their seats in a circle. Give your class a story starter at the beginning of the round. Starting with the person whose birthday is closest to today and them moving around the circle, each person gives his group one sentence of the story. After one person is done, the person sitting to his left adds a line where the first person left off. Students continue around the circle, adding one sentence at a time, until the music stops or until you give another signal. Whoever is in the middle of his sentence or is struggling to think of a sentence when the music stops is out. He must leave the circle. Then students play a second round either continuing the story or with a new story starter. When you stop the music, whoever’s turn it is is eliminated. Play continues until the final round when the person not speaking when the music stops is the winner.
5. Find Your Partner
Prepare a small slip of paper for each student in your class. Each paper should have one word on it that goes with a word on another slip of paper. For example, matching pairs might be fork and spoon, day and night, bat and ball, or table and chairs. Fold the papers and put them into a hat. Each person then draws one slip of paper. On your word, students must circulate and talk to one another trying to find their partner. Once two people think they are a match, they come to you to see if they are right. If they are, they sit down. Play until everyone has found their partner. Then have those partners work together to create a new pair of words that go together. Repeat the game with these student given examples.
6. Hide and Speak
To prepare for this energetic and fast paced game, write several questions each on one index card or post-it note. These questions can be get to know you questions, comprehension questions or questions using current vocabulary words. Before your students arrive, hide these cards throughout your classroom. At the start of class, break your students into two teams. Explain that you have hidden cards throughout the room. On your word, students will search the room for the cards you have hidden. They can only pick up one card at a time. When a student finds a card, he must bring it to you and answer the question on the card. If he answers it correctly, he earns the card for his team. If he does not answer it correctly, he must get someone else from his team to help him find the answer. Once students have correctly answered the question on their card, they can search for another card. At the end of the game (after a certain amount of time or when all the cards have been found) the team with the most cards in their possession wins.
Speaking doesn’t have to be forced or boring when it comes to ESL class. These games are just a few of the fun ways to get your students speaking up and having a good time while they practice their English.
Thursday, March 9, 2017
St. Patrick's Day origins and conversation questions
Discuss or debate the questions below. Remember to support your answers!
- Have you ever been to Ireland? If yes, how was it? If no, do you want to go?
- Have you ever celebrated St. Patrick's Day? If yes, what did you do? Please explain.
- Do you have any special plans for St. Patrick's Day this year? Why/not?
- Do you have any holidays similar to St. Patrick's Day in your country? If yes, please explain. If no, would you want a similar holiday?
- Do you have a particular holiday that you would call your favorite? If yes, what is it?
- What do you know about St. Patrick's Day?
- On St. Patrick's Day, it's traditional to wear something green. Why do you think so?
- What is a leprechaun? If you're not sure, check your dictionary. Then answer the following question: Do you think leprechauns are real? Why/not?
- What is a shamrock? If you're not sure, check your dictionary. Then answer the following question: Why is it important in Ireland?
- What are your impressions about Ireland? How do they compare to your classmates' opinions? Do you think these ideas are accurate or inaccurate? Please explain.
- Many countries celebrate St. Patrick's Day with large parades, Irish food, and beer. Why do you think so many places celebrate this day?
- Why don't more countries in the world celebrate St. Patrick's Day, like they do Christmas or Halloween? Please explain.
- What holidays are unique to your country? Please explain.
- Do you think St. Patrick's Day is a real holiday, or is just another hallmark holiday for some company to make money? Why/not?
- Would you want to visit Ireland for St. Patrick's Day next year? Why/not?
- Have you ever heard of the "Blarney Stone?" What do you think it is? Now check your dictionary to confirm your answer. Was your answer right or wrong?
- Many bars serve green beer for St. Patrick's Day. What is green beer?!! How does it become green? Would you want to try it?
- What are your impressions about Irish people? How do they compare to your classmates' opinions? Do you think these ideas are accurate or inaccurate?
- The Irish have the negative stereotype of being big drinkers. Why do you think they have this stereotype? What do you think about stereotypes in general?
- What stereotypes are there about people from your country? Why do you think your countrymen have this stereotype? What can you say about stereotypes?
Download the lesson:
- Ireland, the Irish, and St. Patrick's Day Printable
- What does St. Patrick's Day mean to you? For many, it means being honorary Irish for a day. It means a large parade with marching bands, floats, and folk dressed in green top hats and tails. It means green beer, and a lot of it. In Chicago, the river is dyed green. In New York, 150,000 marchers participate in the parade. And in Dublin, the party lasts for five days!The holiday honors St. Patrick, who is the patron saint of Ireland and believed to have died on March 17th. He lived in the 6th century A.D., and came to Ireland to convert its people to Christianity. Much of his real life has been mixed with legend and stories, though, and scholars disagree on many points. For example, some say that Irish pirates captured and enslaved Patrick as a boy. Or, according to legend, he herded all the snakes out of Ireland and into the sea, even if scientists now know that Ireland has never had any snakes. In fact, some historians boldly state that the St. Patrick we know today is actually the composite of two people who lived in the 5th and 6th centuries.Besides Ireland, in countries where the holiday is celebrated, many people of Irish descent usual live. In the U.S., for example, New York, Boston, and Chicago all have very large Irish communities, and so the cities have a long tradition of festivities. But Munich in Germany, Birmingham in England, and even Moscow in Russia celebrate the day, too, as the holiday has become more and more commercialized and common.It's in Dublin nowadays that you can find the largest goings on. Not too long ago, the Irish celebrated St. Patrick's Day as a religious holiday only. In fact, all the pubs were closed on March 17th in observance of the day, which didn't change until the 1970s. Since the mid-1990s, though, the Irish government has used the holiday as an opportunity to display Ireland and Irish culture to the world. Specifically, they wanted a festival that equaled the best celebrations anywhere in the world, provided motivation for people of Irish descent, and portrayed a positive and accurate image of the country. What began as a one day festival in 1996, became a three day festival the next year. In 2006, it lasted five days!And green is the theme of the day, of course. The nickname of Ireland is the "Emerald Isle," due to the rich green of the countryside. People often wear a shamrock in their lapel or cap, as well as a green, white, and orange badge in honor of the Irish flag. Let's not also forget the beer, an important tradition to any St. Patrick's Day celebration, which gets a squire of green dye.So now, what does St. Patrick's Day mean to you? And do you have any plans?
Instructions:
Step 1: You will listen to an article about St. Patrick's Day. The article is a little more than 4.5 minutes long. Listen only, and don't worry about understanding everything.
Step 2: Read and understand the questions, then listen again. As you are listening, try to answer the questions in your head. Don't write the answers yet. Next, listen again and write the answers this time. Check your answers with a partner.
Step 3: Read the article. Check in your dictionary any unknown words. Now listen again. Can you understand more?
Step 4: Listen! Listen! Listen! Listen to the article on the train or in your free time. Each time you listen, you will slowly improve!
Download the lesson:
Tuesday, July 19, 2016
101 Conversation Starters
(Also see How to Start a Conversation)
Ice Breakers
Childhood Questions
School/Work Topics
Relationship Questions
Sports Conversation Starters
Vacation Questions
Food/Drink Topics
Entertainment Topics
Personal Questions
Misc. Conversation Starters
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